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Mycobacterium abscessus is resistant to many antibiotics in vitro, but the macrolides clarithromycin (CLR) and azithromycin (AZM) retain activity. However, M. abscessus could rapidly develop resistance to macrolides through induction of the ribosomal methyltransferase gene erm(41).
M. abscessus was recently split into a complex that includes M. abscessus and — as a separate species — Mycobacterium massiliense. M. massiliense does not have the erm(41) gene and responds to CLR better than M. abscessus. Researchers recently examined several questions regarding management of infections caused by these two pathogens.
On in vitro testing, all 23 M. abscessus isolates developed a high level of inducible CLR resistance within 14 days. Although they a…